Diary of our stinking Govt.

As it's more than 100 days now, it has been suggested that a new thread was needed.  The current govt has been breaking promises and telling lies at a rate so fast it's hard to keep up.Woman Happy

 

This below is worrying, "independent" pffft, as if your own doctor is somehow what? biased, it's ridiculous. So far there is talk of only including people under a certain age 30-35, for now. Remember that if your injured in a car, injured at work or get ill, you too might need to go on the DSP. They have done a similar think in the UK with devastating consequences.

 

and this is the 2nd time recently where the Govt has referred to work as welfare???? So when you go to work tomorrow (or tuesday), just remember that's welfare.

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-20/disability-pensioners-may-be-reassessed-kevin-andrews/5400598

 

Independent doctors could be called in to reassess disability pensioners, Federal Government says

 

The Federal Government is considering using independent doctors to examine disability pensioners and assess whether they should continue to receive payments.

 

Currently family doctors provide reports supporting claims for the Disability Support Pension (DSP).

But Social Services Minister Kevin Andrews is considering a measure that would see independent doctors reassess eligibility.

 

"We are concerned that where people can work, the best form of welfare is work," Mr Andrews said at a press conference.

 

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Mon

And oxy morons have the gall to call a waste of money. Paying for higher education for people who have no intention to use it or pay for it is a Huge waste. Plenty of examples and admissions on the internet.

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Australians may boycott Indonesia if Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran are executed: Julie Bishop

 

Weak threat, is that the best she could come up with?

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"And oxy morons have the gall to call a waste of money. Paying for higher education for people who have no intention to use it or pay for it is a Huge waste. Plenty of examples and admissions on the internet."

 

What has that got to do with criticism of Abbott and the Govt?

 

Personal attacks on posters again? Some people never learn do they?

 

A Govt in chaos:

 

Abbott government senators prepared to cross floor over Racial Discrimination Act

 

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/abbott-government-senators-prepared-...

 

 

Philip Ruddock sacked from Chief Whip position — was it retribution?

 

PRIME Minister Tony Abbott sacked Chief Whip Philip Ruddock today in what is being seen as punishment for Monday’s leadership spill motion.

 

The removal of Mr Ruddock, the longest serving MP of any party, could further anger backbench critics of the Prime Minister.

 

http://www.news.com.au/national/philip-ruddock-sacked-from-chief-whip-position-was-it-retribution/st...

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Aug 2014

Department of Defence spends millions on vacant space

 

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/public-service/department-of-defence-spends-millions-on-vac...

 

October 2014

Abbott government rips up the rulebook for the ATO's new building

 

Value-for-money guidelines bypassed while ATO pay rent on 50,000 square metres of excess space. 

The Abbott government will ignore Commonwealth value-for-money rules on official real estate as it forces the Australian Taxation Office to spend millions on new offices in regional NSW.

The ATO has confirmed there has been no business case or cost-benefit analysis, as required by the Finance Department's rules, for the plan to build a 6500-square-metre office block in downtown Gosford on the state's central coast.

 

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/public-service/abbott-government-rips-up-the-rulebook-for-t...

 

November 2014

Agriculture Department move out of Canberra to cost millions

 

"The annual lease cost for their current building is $1.3 million and there are six years remaining on the lease," Department of Agriculture deputy secretary Jo Evans told the hearing. 

 

 

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/national/public-service/agriculture-department-move-out-of-canberra-...

 

 

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The Australian

 

(right wing bias)

 

Feb 13

 

Abbott’s pleading calls can’t be made again

 

....In a TV interview after the vote, Abbott denied putting a timeframe on his political recovery.

 

“Did you ask some of your colleagues today for six more months to recover?” Leigh Sales asked on the ABC.

 

“No, I did not,” Abbott replied. He accepted, instead, that he was being “tested every day” and hoped to pass the test.

 

But there should really be no doubt about how long Abbott can survive if he does not stage a dramatic comeback. The answer is in his own remarks to colleagues: a few months.

 

What happens if Abbott cannot change will be no surprise. The alternative team is obvious: Malcolm Turnbull as prime minister, Julie Bishop continuing as deputy leader and Scott Morrison rising to treasurer.

 

A breakthrough on the budget is now impossible. There will be no repeat of last year’s unpopular cuts but a softer approach this year will prove the government is giving up on fiscal reform.

 

The white flag will be a declaration of political weakness, just like Abbott’s inability to reprimand South Australian senator Sean Edwards for diabolical TV interviews about the submarine fleet.

 

The days since Monday’s vote have shown Abbott still has a talent for accidental injuries. His “good government starts today” was a rhetorical stumble but there was worse to come, including a confusing message about whether the GP co-payment is dead or alive.

In question time it feels like late last year all over again. The Labor benches laugh while ministers go on the defensive. Abbott fires personal attacks at Bill Shorten. Government backbenchers look at their mobile phones.

 

Abbott’s message is that he has listened, learned and changed, but he has given his MPs nothing to feed their hopes. The table is bare, the menu a blank page.

 

This is why is it so revealing, and damaging, for the Prime Minister to call it “impertinent” for a radio host to ask whether his chief of staff, Peta Credlin, will resign.

 

For all her strengths, Credlin is now at the centre of a serious internal debate over how the government is run.

 

....Those who have given up on Abbott do not want to be blamed for his future mistakes because they suspect he will make them alone.

 

“He’ll never be able to use the excuse of undermining,” says one.

 

Yet it will be madness if the Liberal Party keeps this leadership stew on the boil into next year. Monday’s vote was a calamity for the government, the first vote on a spill in a federal Liberal government in decades. The divisions cannot be papered over. The problems are dire and failure to fix them means the Liberals are handing power to Labor by default.

 

To leave this unresolved until 2016 will be to turn Abbott into Kevin Rudd and audition Turnbull to play Julia Gillard. Without a rapid improvement there will be a good argument to settle the matter within weeks not months.

 

Abbott’s success will be measured in policy progress, success in parliament and a revival in the opinion polls. If he fails there is a strong argument for him to step down. It is not clear which of his closest allies could convince him to do so.

 

Abbott cannot make those phone calls a second time. Pleading for forgiveness will not work again.

 

After the vote on Monday, the Prime Minister said the government had “looked over the precipice” and decided to step back. His comment reveals that, like other leaders, he confuses his fate with that of the government.

 

Perhaps Abbott is already falling, perhaps he is clinging to the edge of the cliff. But the government is not falling with him.

Nobody needs to be told how long he has to save himself. They can draw their own conclusions

 

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/opinion/abbotts-pleading-calls-cant-be-made-again/story-e6frg6zo-122...

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@am*3 wrote:

Coalition elder statesman Philip Ruddock axed as Chief Whip following Liberal Party spill attempt

 

Tony Abbott's Chief Whip, Philip Ruddock, has been removed in the wake of Tony Abboott's near-death-experience in a spill attempt earlier this week.

 

He will be replaced by Queensland LNP MP Scott Buchholz.

 

The dramatic development appears to be part of the continuing fall-out from that ballot after eyebrows were raised when Mr Abbott's camp underestimated the pro-spill forces at 16 to 18 votes only to find they had more than twice that at 39. In the end, the Prime Minister survived that proposed spill by an uncomfortably close margin of just a dozen votes.

 

Abbott loyalists questioned Mr Ruddock's energy levels with some muttering darkly that he should have possessed a better understanding of the numbers and perhaps been more active in protecting the Prime Minister among tetchy backbenchers.

 

Mr Ruddock, a former New South Wales moderate who became a Howard government hero among conservatives for his role as a tough immigration minister, is the "father of the house" meaning he is the longest serving lower house MP in Canberra.

 

He has been a close ally of Mr Abbott and travelled with him for five weeks as an adviser during the 2013 election campaign.

 

http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/coalition-elder-statesman-philip-ruddock-axed-...


Another captain's pick which has angered his party menbers.

 

Called "The night of the long knives" by one.  More scalps to follow, including his own at the end.

 

http://www.abc.net.au/7.30/content/2015/s4179889.htm

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Thanks for that watched it

 

This shock has rippled around the Liberal Party.

I have been contacted by quite a number of them who say this is just completely nuts

 

Sounds about right! 

 

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It seems like there is a fallout eventuating from the spill. Mr Ruddock has been around for a very long time. TA appears to be a very vindictive type of man imo.
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ABBOTT RIPE FOR THE KNOCKOUT BLOW

...Abbott is fatally wounded. He is unpopular with the country. His government is perpetually behind in the polls. And now most of his own backbenchers have voted no confidence in him. Labor has stood agog, irrelevant to the Liberal breakdown. The spill motion was a personal and political crisis for Abbott. It was also a crisis for the model of politics that he operates.

There are two starkly different ways of conducting politics. It can be problem-solving, or it can be pugilism. Both were on display in Australia's Parliament this week. The Liberal insurrection against Tony Abbott's prime ministership was an unmistakable sign that politics as pugilism had failed.

It was a mutiny against the model of politics that Labor and Liberal alike have developed and that Abbott perfected to the point of failure.

In this model, emphasis is on delivering for the party, not the people. Priority is given to the professional apparatchiks, not the elected members.

Action is premised on the desirability of aggression, political aggression and ideological aggression. Election promises are discarded. Policy proposals are developed in secrecy and sprung upon an unready backbench, parliament and electorate. Media relations are an extension of this construct. Partisan media are succoured, and all other media are treated as hostiles.

Peter Hartcher
SMH
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Who was it that said there is no shortage of jobs? Joe acknowledges otherwise. Highest unemployment rate in more than 12 years.

 

TREASURER JOE HOCKEY HANGS TOUGH DESPITE JOBS SLUMP

 

Treasurer Joe Hockey says his second budget will take account of a sharply slowing jobs market but has affirmed there would be no change from his tough spending cuts approach, arguing it is confidence the economy needs, not stimulus. "The problem in the economy is not a shortage of money, it's about confidence and jobs and growth," he said in an exclusive interview with Fairfax Media.

 

Nervous Liberal MPs are no clearer about the future of the government's most unpopular policy initiative, the GP co-payment, after a slew of mixed signals in which it was said to have been abandoned, and also that it remains a matter of principle to which the government is committed.

 

Some are urging the Treasurer to ditch austerity in favour of more popular policies as the government labours with disastrously low popularity. They say the collapsing employment market means spending is called for to prop up demand, noting that this would also be popular.

 

As well as political pressure, the nation's peak manufacturing body, the Ai Group, has also called for extra spending in the interests of jobs. One day after Australia registered its highest jobless rate in more than a dozen years, Mr Hockey said jobs and growth have become the budget priority and will now form the crucial test for every Commonwealth dollar spent.

 

SMH

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